Unit4
Unit4
Acronymn of LASER is
L LIGHT
A AMPLIFICATION
S BY STIIMULATED
E EMISSION
R OF RADIATION
The basic scientific principle behind a laser was first put forward by Dr. Charles H.townes
in 1954. The efforts of several scientists led to the development of the first laser called
pulsed laser in 1960.
What is a laser ?
• Einstein theory of matter radiation interaction
Optical resonator : A pair of mirrors placed on either side of the active medium is known as
optical resonator. One mirror is completely silvered and the other is partially silvered. The
laser beam comes out through the partially silvered mirror.
Different Pumping Mechanism
• Al2O3(sapphire) host is hard, with high thermal conductivity, and transition metals can
readily be incorporated substitution ally for the Al
• Active Centres(Cr3+ions) have a set of three energy
• High energy storage capability due to long upper laser level lifetime
• Pulse energy upto100J
• Relatively inefficient;0.1 to 1%
• Variety of applications: Plasma diagnostics; Holography
He-Ne Laser
• It is a gas laser, which consists of a narrow quartz tube filled with a mixture of
helium and neon gases in the ratio 9:1 at low pressure (~0.1 mm of Hg).
• Ne atoms act as active centres and responsible for the laser action, while He
atoms are used to help in the excitation process.
• The length of the quartz tube is about 50 cm and the diameter is about 1 cm.
• Two parallel mirrors are placed at the ends of the quartz tube; one of them is
partly transparent while the other is fully reflecting. The spacing between the
mirrors is adjusted such that it should be equal to the integral multiple of half-
wavelengths of the laser light.
• The pumping is done through electrical discharge by using electrodes that are
connected to a high voltage source
Construction
Energy Level Diagram
Working
• These two states are metastable so the atoms may stay there for a longer time. Some of the
He atoms get additional energy of 0.05 eV due to collisions with fast moving electrons so
that their energy becomes 20.66 eV & they transfer their energy to ground-state Ne atoms
through in-elastic collisions and excite them to the metastable energy level at 20.66 eV.
Thus, He atoms help to achieve population inversion in Ne atoms.
Continue
• Now some of the Ne atoms will decay spontaneously to the lower state at 18.70 eV by
emitting photons of wavelength 6328 Å.
• The photons that are moving parallel to the axis of the tube will reflect back and forth by
the end mirrors and stimulate other excited Ne atoms to radiate another photon with the
same phase. Thus, due to successive reflections of these photons at the ends of the tube,
the number of photons multiplies.
• After a few microseconds, a monochromatic, intense and collimated beam of red light of
wavelength 6328 Å emerges through the partially silvered mirror.
Semiconductor Laser
• Stimulated emission: Artificially inducing the free electrons by photon to fall into the lower
energy state by releasing energy/photons.
• Free electrons need not wait for their whole lifetime.
• With external photons the free electrons are forced to recombine with holes releasing
doubled-number of photons.
• All the stimulated photons travel in the same direction.
• Beam of high-intensity coherent light: diode-laser.
Continue
• Barcode Scanners
• Communication
• Fiber optic cables are a major mode of communication, because multiple signals can be sent
with high quality and low loss by light propagating along the fibers.
• The light signals can be modulated with the information to be sent by either light emitting
diodes or lasers. The lasers have significant advantages because they are more nearly
monochromatic and this allows the pulse shape to be maintained better over long
distances.
• If a better pulse shape can be maintained, then the communication can be done at higher
rates without overlap of the pulses.
• Telephone fiber drivers are solid state lasers in the size of sand grain and consume a power
of only half mW. Yet they can sent 50 million pulses per second into an attached fiber and
encode over 600 simultaneous conversations.
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• Welding and Cutting
• The highly collimated beam of a laser can be further focused to a microscopic
dot of extremely high energy density for welding and cutting.
• The automobile industry makes extensive use of CO2 lasers with powers up to
several kilowatts for computer controlled welding on auto assembly lines.
• CO2 lasers to weld stainless steel handles on copper cooking pots.
• A nearly impossible task for conventional welding because of the great
difference in thermal conductivities between stainless steel and copper, it is
done so quickly by the laser that the thermal conductivities are irrelevant.
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Snell’s Law:
n1sin 1 = n2 sin 2
or
2 > 1
Acceptance Angle
• Not all rays entering the fiber core will continue to be propagated down its length
• Only rays with sufficiently shallow grazing angle (i.e. angle to the normal > C ) at the core-
cladding interface are transmitted by TIR.
• Any ray incident into fiber core at angle > a will be transmitted to core-cladding interface at
an angle < C and will not follow TIR
a
Numerical Aperture (NA) :
NA = sina = [(n1)2-(n2)2]1/2
Classification of Fibre
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Losses in Optical Fibre
Attenuation (or Transmission loss): determines the maximum repeater less separation
between a transmitter and receiver.
Logarithmic relationship between the optical output power and the optical input power
z
P ( z ) Po e
where,
P(z) : Optical power at distance ‘z’ from input
Po : Input optical power
: Fiber attenuation coefficient, [dB/km]
Application
• Applications – Temperature Sensing
Health Monitoring
Oil wells, power cables, petrochemical plants
Cable stays
Continue
CCD
Buried Multi-
Camera
mode Fibre
Laser
Speckle Image
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